Two Days, One Night (French: Deux jours, une nuit) is a 2014 drama film written and directed by the Dardenne brothers, starring Marion Cotillard and Fabrizio Rongione. It is an international co-production between Belgium, France, and Italy.[5][1][8] The film had its world premiere at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, where it competed for the Palme d'Or.[9] Both the film and Cotillard's performance received generally positive reviews, and the film sold over 1 million tickets in Europe and grossed $9 million worldwide on a €7 million budget, becoming the Dardenne brothers' highest-grossing film.
Among its numerous accolades, the film won the Sydney Film Prize at the 2014 Sydney Film Festival, was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language, was nominated for two César Awards, was nominated for three European Film Awards (winning Best Actress for Cotillard), and was nominated for nine Magritte Awards (winning three, including Best Film and Best Director for Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne). Cotillard also won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress and the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress. Time magazine ranked Cotillard's performance in Two Days, One Night as the seventh best movie performance of 2014. The film was selected as Belgium's submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, but was not selected as one of the final five nominees, though Cotillard received a Best Actress nomination for her performance in the film, making her the first actor to be nominated for an Academy Award for a Belgian film.
In Seraing, an industrial town near Liège, Belgium, young wife and mother Sandra prepares to return to work at Solwal, a small solar panel factory, after a medical leave of absence for depression. During her absence, Mr. Dumont, the manager of Solwal, realizes her colleagues are able to cover her shifts by working slightly longer hours and asks them to choose between retaining Sandra's position or receiving a €1,000 bonus. On Friday evening, after Sandra hears the news and that only two of her 16 coworkers voted for her to stay, she breaks down, feeling hopeless and worthless.
Sandra's husband, Manu, works to lift her spirits and convinces her to talk to Dumont with Juliette, a coworker and friend. Sandra is too petrified to speak, but Juliette argues her case, saying some of the workers felt pressured to vote against Sandra by the factory foreman, Jean-Marc, who insinuated that one employee would be let go regardless of the vote, and Dumont agrees to allow a second, secret ballot on Monday morning.
Pushed by Juliette and Manu, Sandra reluctantly agrees to talk to each of the coworkers who voted against her over the course of the weekend and attempt to persuade seven of them to reject the bonus. She faces an uphill battle, as most of her coworkers, several of whom are immigrants, are counting on the bonus for their own families, and she discovers that some work second jobs to get by. Her resolve to continue wavers when she is met with coldness, such as when a coworker she considered a friend pretends not to be home, or anger, such as when her visit prompts an altercation between a son and father, but she is heartened by the few who support her and say they will change their vote, such as Timur, who breaks down in tears and says he is ashamed of himself, as Sandra covered for him when he broke a panel on his first day. Timur even says he will contact another worker on Sandra's behalf.
On Sunday afternoon, Sandra discovers that Jean-Marc has been calling her coworkers to convince them not to change their votes, as he is against her coming back because of her depression. She visits Anne, who says she would like to vote for Sandra, but Anne's husband interrupts and throws Sandra out. Dejected, Sandra tells Manu to take her home, where she takes an overdose of Xanax. When Anne arrives to say she will support Sandra, Sandra tells Manu about the pills, and he forces her to vomit them up. At the hospital, Sandra tells Manu that she wants to visit her last three coworkers that evening. Anne tells Sandra that she has decided to leave her husband, and Sandra offers her a place to spend the night.
Alphonse, a young African immigrant who is a contract worker at Solwal, tells Sandra that, although he would only get a €150 bonus, Jean-Marc told him to vote against Sandra to fit in with his coworkers. He says he wants to vote for Sandra, but is afraid Jean-Marc will retaliate by giving him a bad review so his contract will not get renewed.
On Monday morning, the atmosphere at Solwal is volatile. While the workers vote, Jean-Pierre calls Sandra a troublemaker, but she stands up for herself. There are eight votes for Sandra—one short of a majority. She tearfully thanks those who supported her, including Alphonse, and is clearing out her locker when Dumont calls her to his office. He tells her that he has decided to give everyone the bonus and also keep her on, but Sandra's joy is short-lived, as he explains he will come up with the money by not renewing the contract of a contract worker. Not wanting to retain her job at the expense of someone else, Sandra rejects this offer and leaves. As she walks away from Solwal, she calls Manu to give him the news. After saying she will begin to look for a new job that day, she tells him, "We put up a good fight. I'm happy."
On 25 February 2013, The Film Stage announced that Marion Cotillard would star in the Dardenne brothers' next film, Two Days, One Night, and that Fabrizio Rongione (who had previously worked with the Dardenne brothers on Rosetta (1999), L'Enfant (2005), Lorna's Silence (2008), and The Kid with a Bike (2011)) would have a supporting role as the husband of Cotillard's character.[10] Cotillard is the most famous actor the Dardenne brothers have worked with,[11] and the first French actor they cast as the lead in one of their films, which usually have relatively unknown Belgian actors in the cast.[12] Jean-Pierre Dardenne said about Cotillard's casting: "hiring such a famous actress was an additional challenge for us. Marion was able to find a new body and a new face for this film."[13] One of the Dardenne brothers' first requests for Cotillard was for her to lose her French Parisian accent, in order for her character to sound like an authentic Belgian.[14] Cotillard said she was very happy when the Dardennes praised her Liège accent.[14]
The Dardenne brothers were co-producers on Jacques Audiard's 2012 romantic drama film Rust and Bone, which Cotillard had starred in, and they met the actress by chance on that film's set in Belgium when she was coming out of an elevator holding her baby.[13] The brothers have said they were won over immediately,[13] with Luc Dardenne calling their first encounter with Cotillard "a cinematic love at first sight",[15] and saying that, "Driving back to Liège, we didn't stop talking about her: her face, her look…"[13]
Initially, the Dardenne brothers had a different project in mind in which Cotillard would play a doctor,[16] but that script did not come together because they had writer's block, so they decided to write a different film for her,[15] which was a project they had originally begun about ten years earlier before setting it aside.[10][15] They started working again on the script that became Two Days, One Night in October 2012, and finished in March 2013.[13]
The script was based on a story the Dardenne brothers read in a sociology book about a worker at Peugeot in France in 1998 who was fired after his boss incited his team to vote for his dismissal because he was preventing them from getting bigger bonuses.[15][17] Luc Dardenne said he and his brother were also inspired by Sidney Lumet's 1957 courtroom drama film 12 Angry Men, "because it's a process of going to see people to try and change their minds".[18]
The film was a Belgian production with French and Italian co-producers.[5][1] It was produced by the Dardenne's Les Films du Fleuve, with co-production support from France's Archipel 35, Italy's BIM Distribuzione, and Belgium's Eyeworks Film & TV Drama. The film received funding from the Flemish Audiovisual Fund, RTBF, and Centre du cinéma et de l'audiovisuel,[2] and received 500,000 euros from Eurimages.[2] The total budget was seven million euros.[2]
Following a six-week rehearsal process,[18] filming began in Seraing, Belgium, in late June 2013 and continued, in chronological order,[19] until September.[2][20] The Dardenne brothers required several takes for the film's many long sequence shots,[19] including 56 takes for one on the second day of filming, and 82 takes for one on the fourth day.[19] Cotillard said she sometimes asked for more takes herself,[21] and that sometimes up to 95 or 100 takes were done.[19]
Two Days, One Night premiered at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival on 20 May 2014.[3] It was released theatrically in France and Belgium the next day, through Diaphana and Cinéart, respectively.[1] The film was screened at the Sydney Film Festival on 9 June and the Munich Film Festival on 29 June, and it was the closing film of the Norwegian Film Festival on 20 August.[22] Artificial Eye released the film in the United Kingdom on 22 August.[1]
The North American premiere of the film occurred at the Telluride Film Festival on 29 August,[23] and it was subsequently screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September,[24] the New York Film Festival on 5 October,[25] the Hamptons Film Festival on 10 October,[26] the Mill Valley Film Festival on 11 October,[27] and the Chicago Film Festival on 16 October.[28] The film was the opening film of Valladolid Film Festival on 18 October,[29] and it was screened at the Savannah Film Festival on 28 October[30] and at AFI Fest on 7 November.[31] Sundance Selects distributed the film in the United States on 24 December 2014.[1]
The film sold over 520,000 tickets in France and grossed US$3.5 million at the French box office.[32][6] It made $1.4 million in the United States and $7.5 million in other territories,[6] with over 1 million tickets sold in Europe.[32] The $9 million worldwide gross[6] made the film the Dardenne brothers' highest-grossing film.[33]
Two Days, One Night received critical acclaim after its premiere at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, where it earned a 15-minute standing ovation, with Marion Cotillard's performance earning particular praise.[34] On the film review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 185 critics' reviews of the film are positive, with an average rating of 8.4/10; the site's "critics consensus" reads: "Another profoundly affecting work from the Dardenne brothers, Two Days, One Night delivers its timely message with honesty and clear-eyed compassion."[35] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 89 out of 100 based on reviews from 38 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[36]
Writing for The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw gave the film five stars out of five and praised Cotillard's "supremely intelligent performance."[37] Empire also gave the film five out of five stars, describing it as "a rare film of unforced simplicity, with an outstanding lead performance";[38] the magazine later chose Two Days, One Night as one of the 50 best films of 2014, ranked at number 44.[39] The Hollywood Reporter praised the film and stated that it stands alongside Marion Cotillard's best work.[40]
Nicholas Barber of the BBC gave the film four stars out of five, praising Cotillard's performance by saying that "she conveys a tremendous amount with the smallest, quietest gestures. When you see the fierce, tearful grin on her face after one successful encounter, and the sleepwalking shuffle she adopts when her depression threatens to engulf her, it’s plain that she is one of the finest cinema actors we have."[11] Emma Dibdin of Digital Spy also gave the film four stars out of five, calling Cotillard "fascinating to watch", and writing: "The physical sluggishness and emotional numbing of depression have seldom been better portrayed on screen, and yet Two Days One Night still emerges as a psychologically delving and quietly uplifting modern-day morality play."[41]
The National Board of Review chose the film as one of the Top 5 Foreign Films of 2014.[42] Time magazine ranked Cotillard's performance in the film as the fourth best female movie performance of 2014 and the seventh best movie performance overall (shared with her performance in The Immigrant).[43]
In Spain, filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar made a list of the best films and performances of 2014, and included Cotillard's performance on his list of best foreign actresses.[44]
In June 2014, the film won the Sydney Film Prize at the Sydney Film Festival, "For its masterfully elegant storytelling, its dedication to a fiercely humanistic, super-realist worldview, its brave, essential commitment to community solidarity, and its celebration of a woman's power and vitality," according to Rachel Perkins, the president of the jury.[45]
On 19 September 2014, it was announced that Two Days, One Night would be Belgium's submission for the foreign language film category at the 87th Academy Awards.[46] Cotillard received a Best Actress nomination for her performance, making her the first actor to be nominated for an Academy Award for a Belgian film.[47]
Cotillard's nomination made her the first actor or actress in a Belgian film to compete for the Oscar.
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